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623 Annals Am. Acad. Pol. & Soc. Sci. 7 (2009)

handle is hein.cow/anamacp0623 and id is 1 raw text is: Introduction
By
LAUREN J. KRIVO
and
RUTH D. PETERSON

The strong links among race, ethnicity,
crime, and justice in the United States are
widely recognized in academic literature, policy
discourse, and the popular media. Despite
widespread recognition of this racial and ethnic
patterning of crime and justice, our under-
standing of the sources and consequences of
these links is limited. In part, this reflects that
researchers seldom approach the topic consid-
ering the fundamentally structural underpinnings
of racialized justice. Thus, current knowledge
begs the question of how inequality in crime
and justice is an outgrowth of structured soci-
etal inequality and the dynamic ways that
individuals interact with social structures. This
results in a narrow criminological understand-
ing which is reflected in the conclusion of a
Lauren J. Krivo is a professor of sociology and associate
director >of the Criminal Justice Research Center at Oh io
State Unirs ity. Her research focuses on explaining
race-ethnic differences in neighborhood crime; patterns
and consquences of the spatial dynamics of race-ethnic
and economic segregation; and the interrelationships
among residential segregation, socioeconomic context,
and crime. She is coeditor of The Many Colors of Crime
(New York University Press 2006) and a recipient of the
American Society qf Criminology's Division on People qf
Color and Crime's Julius Debro Award.
Ruth D. Peterson is a distinguished professor of social
and behavioral sciences, professor of sociology, and
director of the Criminal Justice Research Center at
Ohio State University. Her research focuses on com-
munity conditions and crime, racial and ethnic inequal-
ity in crime, and the consequences of criminal justice
policies for racially and ethnically distinct communi-
ties. She is a fellow  of the American Society o f
Criminology (ASC) and a recipient of its Division on
People of Color and Crime's Julius Debro Award. She
has also reived Ohio State University's Joan Huber
Fellowship ian d the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation
and Correction's Simon Dinitz Award.
NOTE: Direct correspondence to Lauren J. Krivo,
Department of Sociology, 238 Townshend Hall, 1885
Neil Avenue Mall, Ohio State University, Columbus,
OH 43210; phone: 614-247-6378; fax: 614-292-0855;
e-mail: krivo.1@sociology.osu.edu.
DOI: 10.1177/0002716208331094

ANNALS, AAPSS, 623, May 2009

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